Do children get a subpar education in yeshivas?

Naftuli Moster is the founder of Young Advocates for Fair Education, which pushes for more secular instruction in yeshivas.
Naftuli Moster is the founder of Young Advocates for Fair Education, which pushes for more secular instruction in yeshivas.

NEW YORK -- In parts of New York, there are students who can barely read and write in English and have not been taught that dinosaurs once roamed Earth or that the Civil War occurred.

Some of them are in their last year of high school.

That is the claim made by a group of graduates from ultra-Orthodox Jewish private schools called yeshivas, and they say that startling situation has been commonplace for decades.

Over three years ago, Mayor Bill de Blasio's administration opened an investigation into a lack of secular education at yeshivas that serve about 57,000 students in the city, but the investigation essentially stalled almost as soon as it began. The reason, advocates say, is the city's politicians, including the mayor, are fearful of angering the Orthodox Jewish community that represents a crucial voting bloc in major elections.

Then the state stepped in with the most significant action yet in the investigation. MaryEllen Elia, the state education commissioner, released updated rules Nov. 20 dictating how nonpublic schools such as yeshivas are regulated and what students in those schools should learn, with consequences for schools that do not comply.

The guidance could force yeshivas to change how they operate and what they teach. It will also hold de Blasio's feet to the fire, as his administration is forced to increase its investigation into the schools.

"There's no time to waste," said Naftuli Moster, founder of Young Advocates for Fair Education, which pushes for more secular instruction in yeshivas. "New York City has already been dragging its feet for three years."

The city's yeshiva investigation began in 2015, after Moster's group filed a complaint claiming that scores of students -- boys, in particular -- graduate from ultra-Orthodox yeshivas unprepared for work or higher education, with little exposure to nonreligious classes such as science and history. Instead, some yeshiva graduates say, students spend most school days studying Jewish texts. Younger boys sometimes attend about 90 minutes of nonreligious classes at the end of the day, a city report found.

A coalition of prominent ultra-Orthodox rabbis and community members have accused critics of yeshivas of attacking religious freedoms.

"This is a smear campaign against our community and what it stands for," said David Niederman, a rabbi and the president of the United Jewish Organizations of Williamsburg. "If some people are not happy with what they are taught, it is up to them to take action."

Avi Schick, a lawyer for Parents for Educational and Religious Liberty in Schools, a group formed after the 2015 investigation was opened, said, "The intrusive set of requirements imposed by the state demolishes the wall between church and state that politicians have hid behind for decades."

This past summer, the organization handed out 10,000 posters and bumper stickers emblazoned with the hashtag #ProtectYeshivas to parents of children in Orthodox Jewish schools.

The state's guidance places the burden of investigating the schools on de Blasio's administration.

City officials are now required to visit all nonpublic schools by the end of 2021 -- which will coincide with the end of de Blasio's second term -- and visit each school every five years after that. If officials find that the schools are not providing an education that is "substantially equivalent" to what public schools offer, the city can give schools more time and resources to add secular teaching. If that does not work, the city can withhold some funding it provides private schools.

In an interview, the city schools chancellor, Richard Carranza, said he had requested training for Department of Education employees who will visit the schools, and that he would prioritize visits to a half-dozen yeshivas he claimed have barred city officials from entry. After that, he plans to send staff members to several dozen other yeshivas that were listed on the 2015 complaint as having insufficient secular education.

"This is going to be a robust kind of a visit, and a robust looking into all the nonpublic schools," Carranza said. "The mayor has made it really clear from Day 1 for me that he wants us to move aggressively and get this taken care of."

Though complaints about academics have focused on New York's yeshivas, the guidance applies to all nonpublic schools in the state, which has raised alarm bells for other groups.

"We remain gravely concerned over the process, which will likely lend itself to an inconsistent and subjective review of many schools," said Jim Cultrara, director for education at the New York State Catholic Conference.

Advocates for more secular education in yeshivas found reason to celebrate in November, when Democrats seized a commanding majority in the New York state Senate.

The Senate flip robbed Sen. Simcha Felder (D-Brooklyn) of a swing vote that he used last year to add protections for yeshivas in the 11th hour of state budget negotiations. Young Advocates for Fair Education, Moster's group, has sued the state over the Felder amendment, calling it unconstitutional.

Felder, who represents Orthodox enclaves of Brooklyn, declined to comment.

Still, enormous obstacles remain for those who want the city to shine a spotlight on yeshivas.

Few if any politicians -- in Albany or downstate -- are willing to anger the Orthodox political establishment. Urgent problems in the city's 1,800 public schools -- including ballooning student homelessness and entrenched racial segregation -- will take precedence over problems in religious schools that the city does not run.

And advocates said the new rules are encouraging, but incomplete.

Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, said the rules are loose enough that schools could "game the system."

"Are they going to find a loophole and drive their Mack Truck through it on the backs of the students?" Lieberman asked, referring to religious school leaders.

Elia, the education commissioner, said the guidelines are a first step. "Clearly, the most important part is the reviews that are done" after schools are visited, she said.

But Moster said he wanted the city to visit schools on a shorter timeline, for the sake of children who spend their days in yeshivas.

"You have kids who have entered school when we first started the complaint," he said during a news conference last week. "They are almost going to be in high school by the time any corrective action takes place."

Religion on 01/19/2019

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